750+ Volunteers Clean Beaches from Norwalk to New London Including Griswold Point in Old Lyme

Kendall Perkins displays a skull she found during Save The Sound's Coastal Clean-up Day held yesterday at White Sand Beach.

Kendall Perkins displays a skull she found during Save The Sound‘s Coastal Clean-up Day held yesterday at White Sand Beach.

Save the Sound, a bi-state program of Connecticut Fund for the environment, organized 31 cleanups across Connecticut’s shoreline this weekend. The efforts are part of International Coastal Cleanup, which brings together hundreds of thousands of people each year to remove plastic bags, broken glass, cigarette butts, and other trash from the world’s shores and waterways. One of the areas included in the cleanup effort was from White Sand Beach to the tip of Griswold Point in Old Lyme.

The event was founded by Ocean Conservancy in 1985, and Save the Sound has served as the official Connecticut coordinator for the last 14 years.

save_the_sound_logo“We didn’t plan it this way, but I can’t imagine a better way to celebrate the 31st anniversary of International Coastal Cleanup Day than with 31 cleanups!” said Chris Cryder, special projects coordinator for Save the Sound. “The cleanup just keeps growing, in Connecticut and worldwide. We have some terrific new and returning partners this year, including the SECONN Divers, folks from the U.S. District Court, multiple National Charity League chapters, and many more.”

Cryder continued, “The diversity of the groups involved really reflects the truth that ocean health affects all of us. Clean beaches and oceans are safer for beachgoers and boaters, they’re healthier for wildlife that aren’t eating plastic or getting tangled up in trash, and they’re economic powerhouses for the fishing and tourism industries.”

The cleanups are co-hosted by a wide array of local partners including high schools, youth groups, and scout troops; churches; boaters and divers; watershed associations, park stewards, and land trusts. Twenty-eight cleanups will be held Saturday, with three more on Sunday and others through mid-October, for a total of 70 cleanups statewide.

Based on the estimates of cleanup captains, between 750 and 900 volunteers were expected to pitch in on Saturday alone. Last year, a total of 1,512 volunteers participated in Save the Sound cleanups throughout the fall. They collected more than three tons of litter and debris from 58 sites on Connecticut beaches, marshes, and riverbanks.

Over the event’s three-decade history, 11.5 million volunteers have collected 210 million pounds of trash worldwide. Every piece of trash volunteers find is tracked, reported to Save the Sound, and included in Ocean Conservancy’s annual index of global marine debris. The data is used to track trends in litter and devise policies to stop it at its source.

Are You Ready For Some Football? 1pm Kick-Off at Lyme-Old Lyme HS for OL/Valley Warriors v. Saybrook Rams

football

Action from last year’s game at Old Lyme.

This afternoon the Valley-Old Lyme Warriors meet the Saybrook Rams in the only game to be played in Old Lyme this season.  The Warriors regular home field is at Valley Regional High School.

Kick-off is at 1 p.m. on the Lyme-Old Lyme High School varsity field.

The Warriors come into today’s game with an unbeaten record having defeated Ellington 14-7 in the only game of the season to date.

We may not traditionally be a football town, but let’s turn out a huge crowd to support our boys!

Christ The King Church Hosts ‘Harvest Fun Day’ Today

All the fun of the fair will be happening Saturday at Christ the King's Harvest Fun Day.

All the fun of the fair will be happening Saturday at Christ the King’s Harvest Fun Day.

Harvest Fun Day takes place at Christ the King Church on Saturday, Sept. 17, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and features the King’s Rummage Sale, a silent auction, a bake sale, kids’ games and crafts, great food, and an autumn plant sale.

Harvest Fun Day celebrates Autumn in Old Lyme, Sept. 21

There’s something for everyone at the King’s Rummage Sale on Saturday.

The Rummage Sale, bake sale, and plant sale will continue Sunday morning (Sept. 18), 9 a.m. to noon (while supplies last).

Visit www.christthekingchurch.net for directions.

For more information, call 860-434-1669.

Old Lyme Historical Society Hosts Popular Antique Appraisal Event Today

A member of the Old Lyme Historical Society looks on as Carol Brevard of Brevard Appraisal and Estate Services examines an antique candelabra at the Old Lyme Historical Society’s antiques appraisal event “Vintage!” in March 2013.

A member of the Old Lyme Historical Society looks on as Carol Brevard of Brevard Appraisal and Estate Services examines an antique candelabra at the Old Lyme Historical Society’s 2013 antiques appraisal event.

The Old Lyme Historical Society will hold their highly popular Annual Antique Appraisal event on Saturday, Sept. 17, from 1 to 4 p.m. at the Old Lyme Memorial Town Hall, 52 Lyme St., in Old Lyme.

Experienced and well respected appraisers will be on hand to give verbal assessments of articles brought in by the public. They include:

  • OLHSI_Antique_Poster_2016Jeffrey Cooley, owner of the Old Lyme-based Cooley Gallery, whose speciality includes American art including 19th Century Hudson River School and American Impressionism.
  • Nancy Hoffman, who is a specialist in early country items and textiles, as well as linens, quilts, primitive country furniture and decorative pieces.
  • Joy Ruskin Hanes and Lee Hanes, owners of Hanes & Ruskin Antiques, both of whom have extensive experience in appraising 18th and 19th Century high-style furniture.
  • Edwin Nadeau, Jr., who has been the owner/operator of Nadeau’s Auction Gallery for over 34 years. He has been in the antiques business for 46 years, and has conducted many speciality and general sales in jewelry, and fine furniture. His daughter Heather, has been his appraisal assistant for many years.
  • Curt Wendler, owner of Curt Wendler Rare Books in Old Saybrook, CT has 30 years experience in buying and selling fine books. In addition to books, he will examine autographs, photos, posters and other ephemera.
  • Alice Winalski has been the owner of Nyman Jewelers in Old Saybrook since 2001, and has more than 20 years experience appraising customer’s jewelry. She is also a talented and creative jewelry designer.

The public is encouraged to bring photos in of any items, which they wish to have appraised that are too difficult to transport. Take multiple shots from all angles including any identifying signatures.

There are modest fees for the appraisal: $7 for one item, $14 for two items, and $20 for three items.

The 2016 Appraisal event is sponsored by Acorn Financial Services, All-Pro Automotive, Headlines Unisex Salon, James Meehan, Art & Design, Pasta Vita, M.J. DeRisio, William Pitt/Sotheby’s, Past OLHSI Board member, Sennheiser, Shore & Country Real Estate, and Shoreline Web News LLC, Publishers of LymeLine.com & ValleyNewsNow.com

Student volunteers from the Lyme-Old Lyme High School History Club will be helpers throughout the afternoon.

Refreshments will be served. There will also be door prizes, and musical entertainment.

It’s ‘Save the Sound’ Coastal Clean-up Weekend! Volunteer to Help at White Sand Beach Today

save_the_sound_logoSave the Sound, a bi-state program of Connecticut Fund for the environment, is hosting coastal clean-ups at 70 sites across Long Island Sound’s Connecticut shoreline throughout September and October.

One of the clean-up sites is White Sand Beach to Griswold Point in Old Lyme where work will start today Sept. 17, at 9 a.m.  St. Ann’s Church in Old Lyme is co-hosting the clean-up. Members of the public are invited to register for cleanups here.

The clean-ups, co-hosted by local partners including civic associations, youth groups, churches, clubs, and environmental organizations, are part of the International Coastal Cleanup. This year’s International Coastal Cleanup (ICC) Day is tomorrow, Sept. 17. Twenty public cleanups are expected on Saturday, with two more on Sunday and others through mid-October. There are also additional private clean-ups.

Ocean trash threatens the health of beach-goers, birds, sea turtles, fish, and marine mammals, and damages economic activity such as tourism and the fishing industry. Every piece of trash volunteers find is tracked, reported to Save the Sound, and included in Ocean Conservancy’s annual index of global marine debris.

Ocean Conservancy founded ICC 31 years ago, and Save the Sound has been the official Connecticut coordinator since 2002. Over the event’s three-decade history, 11.5 million volunteers have collected 210 million pounds of trash worldwide.

In 2015, Save the Sound brought together 1,512 volunteers at 58 cleanups to remove over three tons of litter and debris from Connecticut beaches, marshes, and riverbanks.

For a complete list of public coastal clean-ups happening in Connecticut throughout September and October, visit Save the Sound’s blog.

Selected additional clean-ups on Saturday, Sept. 17 are:

  • Long Wharf Nature Preserve, New Haven. 10:00am – 2:00pm. With the New Haven Land Trust.
  • Branford Point Park, Branford. 9:00am – 12:00pm. With Yale Environmental Health Sciences and the East Shore District Health Department.
  • Hammonasset State Park, Madison. East Beach 9:00am – 12:00pm, West Beach 9 – 11:00am. West Beach with Friends of Hammonassett.
  • Ocean Beach Park, New London. 10:30am – 12:00pm. With the Cedar Island Marina Research Lab.

A selected clean-up on Sunday, Sept. 18 is:

  • City Pier, New London. 9:00am – 12:00pm. Underwater dive cleanup with the SECONN Divers.